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#1
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Did you ever find a edge sander?
Distance from you and 3 phase are negatives, I suppose. There are 2 in Marshall, Tx., Lots 19 & 20: http://irsauctions.com/index_lots.as...tails&id=15986 |
#2
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On 5/13/2012 9:57 AM, Sonny wrote:
Did you ever find a edge sander? Distance from you and 3 phase are negatives, I suppose. There are 2 in Marshall, Tx., Lots 19& 20: http://irsauctions.com/index_lots.as...tails&id=15986 Sonny! Thank you for still thinking about me. I have decided against the edge sander for the time being. For the past 30+ years I have predominately used red oak and had no need to sand my ripped edges. In the past couple of years I have added a Festool track saw and have also started using white oak a LOT. White oak burning like maple and cherry is something that I was not aware of. A few weeks ago I started using red oak again for a small project and once again an 18 month old Forrest WWII is cutting smooth as a baby's butt, and no burn. Thanks again, I think perhaps for the first time in many many years I may consider a good quality rip blade for white oak. |
#3
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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Use your WWII. I do it's a great blade for it. Just move it faster.
On 5/14/2012 6:55 PM, Leon wrote: On 5/13/2012 9:57 AM, Sonny wrote: Did you ever find a edge sander? Distance from you and 3 phase are negatives, I suppose. There are 2 in Marshall, Tx., Lots 19& 20: http://irsauctions.com/index_lots.as...tails&id=15986 Sonny! Thank you for still thinking about me. I have decided against the edge sander for the time being. For the past 30+ years I have predominately used red oak and had no need to sand my ripped edges. In the past couple of years I have added a Festool track saw and have also started using white oak a LOT. White oak burning like maple and cherry is something that I was not aware of. A few weeks ago I started using red oak again for a small project and once again an 18 month old Forrest WWII is cutting smooth as a baby's butt, and no burn. Thanks again, I think perhaps for the first time in many many years I may consider a good quality rip blade for white oak. |
#4
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 5/14/2012 6:20 PM, tiredofspam wrote:
Use your WWII. I do it's a great blade for it. Just move it faster. Been doing that for 13+ years. Still it is hard to tell just how fast to feed the wood to prevent scorching. I do still get glue joint quality cuts, but I have to sand the edges if they are going to be exposed, something that I rarely need to do with red oak. On 5/14/2012 6:55 PM, Leon wrote: On 5/13/2012 9:57 AM, Sonny wrote: Did you ever find a edge sander? Distance from you and 3 phase are negatives, I suppose. There are 2 in Marshall, Tx., Lots 19& 20: http://irsauctions.com/index_lots.as...tails&id=15986 Sonny! Thank you for still thinking about me. I have decided against the edge sander for the time being. For the past 30+ years I have predominately used red oak and had no need to sand my ripped edges. In the past couple of years I have added a Festool track saw and have also started using white oak a LOT. White oak burning like maple and cherry is something that I was not aware of. A few weeks ago I started using red oak again for a small project and once again an 18 month old Forrest WWII is cutting smooth as a baby's butt, and no burn. Thanks again, I think perhaps for the first time in many many years I may consider a good quality rip blade for white oak. |
#5
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![]() "Leon" wrote in message ... On 5/14/2012 6:20 PM, tiredofspam wrote: Use your WWII. I do it's a great blade for it. Just move it faster. Been doing that for 13+ years. Still it is hard to tell just how fast to feed the wood to prevent scorching. I do still get glue joint quality cuts, but I have to sand the edges if they are going to be exposed, something that I rarely need to do with red oak. ================================================== ====== Get a Freud glue line rip blade. Glue line quality cut and no burning. On 5/14/2012 6:55 PM, Leon wrote: On 5/13/2012 9:57 AM, Sonny wrote: Did you ever find a edge sander? Distance from you and 3 phase are negatives, I suppose. There are 2 in Marshall, Tx., Lots 19& 20: http://irsauctions.com/index_lots.as...tails&id=15986 Sonny! Thank you for still thinking about me. I have decided against the edge sander for the time being. For the past 30+ years I have predominately used red oak and had no need to sand my ripped edges. In the past couple of years I have added a Festool track saw and have also started using white oak a LOT. White oak burning like maple and cherry is something that I was not aware of. A few weeks ago I started using red oak again for a small project and once again an 18 month old Forrest WWII is cutting smooth as a baby's butt, and no burn. Thanks again, I think perhaps for the first time in many many years I may consider a good quality rip blade for white oak. |
#6
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 5/16/2012 9:47 PM, CW wrote:
"Leon" wrote in message ... On 5/14/2012 6:20 PM, tiredofspam wrote: Use your WWII. I do it's a great blade for it. Just move it faster. Been doing that for 13+ years. Still it is hard to tell just how fast to feed the wood to prevent scorching. I do still get glue joint quality cuts, but I have to sand the edges if they are going to be exposed, something that I rarely need to do with red oak. ================================================== ====== Get a Freud glue line rip blade. Glue line quality cut and no burning. Thinking about doing that but geez I hate changing blades. No burning on maple, cherry , and white oak? Scorching is what I am concerned about otherwise the cut is fine. I have no scorching problem with red oak, pine, walnut, plywood. |
#7
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![]() "Leon" wrote in message ... On 5/16/2012 9:47 PM, CW wrote: "Leon" wrote in message ... On 5/14/2012 6:20 PM, tiredofspam wrote: Use your WWII. I do it's a great blade for it. Just move it faster. Been doing that for 13+ years. Still it is hard to tell just how fast to feed the wood to prevent scorching. I do still get glue joint quality cuts, but I have to sand the edges if they are going to be exposed, something that I rarely need to do with red oak. ================================================== ====== Get a Freud glue line rip blade. Glue line quality cut and no burning. Thinking about doing that but geez I hate changing blades. No burning on maple, cherry , and white oak? Scorching is what I am concerned about otherwise the cut is fine. I have no scorching problem with red oak, pine, walnut, plywood. ================================================== ================== Never tried it on cherry. Does a great job on white oak and maple. |
#8
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Leon, you ever consider the 30t WWII?
It will allow you to rip faster. I don't know how the crosscuts would be, but that would help eliminate the burning. That's the penalty for a general use blade like the 40T. It does everything well, not perfect. On 5/17/2012 9:13 AM, Leon wrote: On 5/16/2012 9:47 PM, CW wrote: "Leon" wrote in message ... On 5/14/2012 6:20 PM, tiredofspam wrote: Use your WWII. I do it's a great blade for it. Just move it faster. Been doing that for 13+ years. Still it is hard to tell just how fast to feed the wood to prevent scorching. I do still get glue joint quality cuts, but I have to sand the edges if they are going to be exposed, something that I rarely need to do with red oak. ================================================== ====== Get a Freud glue line rip blade. Glue line quality cut and no burning. Thinking about doing that but geez I hate changing blades. No burning on maple, cherry , and white oak? Scorching is what I am concerned about otherwise the cut is fine. I have no scorching problem with red oak, pine, walnut, plywood. |
#9
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On 5/17/2012 11:41 AM, tiredofspam wrote:
Leon, you ever consider the 30t WWII? It will allow you to rip faster. I don't know how the crosscuts would be, but that would help eliminate the burning. That's the penalty for a general use blade like the 40T. It does everything well, not perfect. Yeah I have considered it........ might shoot Forrest an e-mail and see what they have to say.. |
#10
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On 5/17/2012 11:16 AM, CW wrote:
"Leon" wrote in message ... On 5/16/2012 9:47 PM, CW wrote: "Leon" wrote in message ... On 5/14/2012 6:20 PM, tiredofspam wrote: Use your WWII. I do it's a great blade for it. Just move it faster. Been doing that for 13+ years. Still it is hard to tell just how fast to feed the wood to prevent scorching. I do still get glue joint quality cuts, but I have to sand the edges if they are going to be exposed, something that I rarely need to do with red oak. ================================================== ====== Get a Freud glue line rip blade. Glue line quality cut and no burning. Thinking about doing that but geez I hate changing blades. No burning on maple, cherry , and white oak? Scorching is what I am concerned about otherwise the cut is fine. I have no scorching problem with red oak, pine, walnut, plywood. ================================================== ================== Never tried it on cherry. Does a great job on white oak and maple. Well then it should do well on cherry too, I would think. I'll have to look a little closer at that blade. Thanks. |
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